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malt

 
Dictionary: malt   (môlt) pronunciation

n.
  1. Grain, usually barley, that has been allowed to sprout, used chiefly in brewing and distilling.
  2. An alcoholic beverage, such as beer or ale, brewed from malt.
  3. See malted milk (sense 2).

v., malt·ed, malt·ing, malts.

v.tr.
  1. To process (grain) into malt.
  2. To treat or mix with malt or a malt extract.
v.intr.
To become malt.

[Middle English, from Old English mealt.]


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The product of the hydrolysis of starch by β-amylase that occurs during the germination of barley in brewing. See also maltose.




Grain product used in beverages and foods. Malt provides a basis for fermentation and adds flavour and nutrients. It is made by steeping grain, usually barley, in water and allowing partial germination to occur. The flavour of beer primarily results from the malt from which it is made. The enzymes produced within the barley seed during germination break down starch into malt sugar, or maltose, which is then fermented by yeast to yield alcohol and carbon dioxide. Whiskey likewise is made with malt.

For more information on malt, visit Britannica.com.


malt extract

Mixture of starch breakdown products containing mainly maltose (malt sugar), prepared from barley or wheat.

The grain is allowed to sprout, when the enzyme diastase (amylase) develops and hydrolyses the starch to maltose. The mixture is then extracted with hot water. Malt extract may remain as a concentrated solution or be evaporated to dryness.

[MAWLT] 1. A grain (typically barley) that is sprouted, kiln-dried and ground into a mellow, slightly sweet-flavored powder. This powdered malt has many uses including making vinegar, brewing beer, distilling liquor and as a nutritious additive to many foods. Malted-milk powder and malt vinegar are two of the most popular malt products available today. See also malt syrup. 2. A soda-fountain drink, also called malted, that is a thick, rich mixture of malted-milk powder, milk, ice cream and a flavoring such as chocolate or vanilla. See also milk shake.

 
malt, a grain (usually barley) steeped in water, partially germinated, then dried and cured. It is used in brewing to convert cereal starches to sugars by means of the enzymes (chiefly diastase) produced during germination. Its high carbohydrate and protein content makes it a valuable nutrient.


Mucosal-associated lymphoid tissue.

Wikipedia: Malt
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Malted barley

Malting is a process applied to cereal grains, in which the grains are made to germinate by soaking in water[1] and are then quickly halted from germinating further by drying/heating with hot air.[2][3] Thus, malting is a combination of two processes: the sprouting process and the kiln-drying process. These latter terms are often preferred when referring to the field of brewing for batches of beer or other beverages as they provide more specific information.

The term "malt" refers to several products of the process:

  • the grains to which this process has been applied, for example malted barley;
  • the sugar, heavy in maltose, derived from such grains, such as the baker's malt used in various cereals; or
  • a product based on malted milk, similar to a malted milkshake (i.e., "malts").

Whisky or beer made from malted barley or rye can also be called malt, as in Alfred Edward Housman's aphorism "malt does more than Milton can, to justify God's ways to Man."

Homebrewing malt extracts: liquid in a can and spray dried.

Contents

Uses

Malt from an external supplier is delivered to a brewery

Malted grain is used to make malt beer, malt whisky, malted shakes, malt vinegar, Maltesers, and some baked goods, such as malt loaf. Malting grains develops the enzymes that are required to modify the grain's starches into sugars, including monosaccharides (glucose, fructose, etc.) and disaccharides (sucrose, etc.). It also develops other enzymes, such as proteases, which break down the proteins in the grain into forms which can be utilized by yeast. Barley is the most commonly malted grain in part because of its high diastatic power or enzyme content. Also very important is the retention of the grain's husk even after threshing, unlike the bare seeds of threshed wheat or rye. This protects the growing acrospire (developing plant embryo) from damage during malting, which can easily lead to mold growth. It also allows the mash of converted grain to create a filter bed during lautering (see brewing). Other grains may be malted, especially wheat.

Maltings

A maltings, sometimes called malthouse, or malting floor, is a building that houses the process of converting barley into malt, for use in the brewing or distilling process.[4] This is done by kiln-drying the sprouted barley. This is usually done by spreading the sprouted barley on a perforated wooden floor. Smoke, coming from an oasting fireplace (via smoke channels) is then used to heat the wooden floor (and thus, the sprouted grain with it). The temperature thus employed is usually around 55° Celsius (131° Fahrenheit). A typical floor maltings is a long, single-story building with a floor that slopes slightly from one end of the building to the other. Floor maltings began to be phased out in the 1940s in favor of 'pneumatic plants'. Here large industrial fans are used to blow air through the germinating grain beds and to pass hot air through the malt being kilned. Like floor maltings these pneumatic plants are batch processes but of considerably greater size, typically 100 tonne batches compared with 20 tonne batches for a floor maltings.

Malt categories

Malt is often divided into two categories by brewers: base malts and specialty malts. Base malts have enough diastatic power to convert their own starch and usually that of some amount of starch from unmalted grain, called adjuncts. Specialty malts have little diastatic power; they are used to provide flavor, color, or "body" (viscosity) to the finished beer. Caramel or crystal malts are specialty malts that have been subjected to heat treatment that converts their starches to sugars non-enzymatically. Within these categories are a variety of types distinguished largely by the kilning temperature (see mash ingredients). In addition, malts are distinguished by the two major species of barley used for malting, two-row and six-row. [5] A new encapsulating technology permits the production of malt granules. Malt granules are the dried liquid extract from malt using in the brewing or distilling process. [6]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "How to brew manually by John Palmer
  2. ^ "Quality Factors for Malting, Brewing and other End-uses". Oregon State University. http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/css/330/five/BarleyOverview.htm#BarleyMaltingQuality. Retrieved 2007-04-13. 
  3. ^ What is malting?
  4. ^ How is Malt made? - The Maltsters Association of Great Britain
  5. ^ Goldhammer, Ted (2008), The Brewer's Handbook, 2nd ed., Apex, ISBN 0-9675212-3-8, pp. 31 ff.
  6. ^ "Patent EP1385931 Malt Granules". www.freepatentsonline.com. http://www.www.freepatentsonline.com/EP1385931.html. Retrieved 2009-05-25. 

Bibliography

  • D.E. Briggs, Malts and Malting, Kluwer Academic / Plenum Publishers (30 Sep 1998), ISBN 0412298007
  • Christine Clark, The British Malting Industry Since 1830, Hambledon Continuum (1 Jul 1998), ISBN 1852851708

External links

  • Make Your Own Malt, Brew Your Own magazine (ISSN 1081-826X ), August 1997, pp. 32-36.
  • UK Malt The website of The Maltsters' Association of Great Britain. UK Malting Barley information and malt images.
  • TIME Magazine Article about Malt Granules from GranMalt in the TIME Magazine.

Translations: Malt
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - malt
v. tr. - malte, gøre til malt
v. intr. - maltes, blive til malt

Nederlands (Dutch)
mout, moutwijn, (drank van) melkpoeder, mout worden, mouten

Français (French)
n. - (Culin) malt, whisky pur malt, (US) malté, milk-shake
v. tr. - malter
v. intr. - malter

Deutsch (German)
n. - Malz, (ugs.) Malzwhisky
v. - malzen, zu Malz werden, Malz herstellen

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - βύνη, ψημένο κριθάρι ζυθοποιίας, (καθομ.) άσπρο (απρόσμικτο) ουίσκι
adj. - από ζύμωση (όχι διύλιση)

Italiano (Italian)
malto

Português (Portuguese)
n. - malte (m), cerveja (f)
adj. - maltado

Русский (Russian)
делать солод, солод

Español (Spanish)
n. - malta
v. tr. - convertir (la cebada) en malta, hacer o tratar con malta, maltear
v. intr. - maltear, hacer o tratar con malta

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - malt, maltdryck
adj. - mälta, tillsätta malt till, bli malt

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
麦芽, 啤酒, 使成麦芽, 用麦芽处理, 成为麦芽

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 麥芽, 啤酒
v. tr. - 使成麥芽, 用麥芽處理
v. intr. - 成為麥芽

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 엿기름 , 맥아
v. tr. - 맥아로 하다
v. intr. - 맥아가 되다, 맥아를 만들다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 麦芽, モルト, 麦芽酒
v. - 麦芽にする, 麦芽で処理する

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) شعير‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮לתת, לתת (שעורים), מאלט‬
v. tr. - ‮הפך שעורים ללתת, ערבב בלתת‬
v. intr. - ‮נעשה ללתת‬


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